Collagen is a key structural protein in the extracellular matrix of many tissues. It provides biological tissues with tensile mechanical strength and is enzymatically cleaved by a class of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) known as collagenases. Collagen enzymatic kinetics has been well characterized in solubilized, gel and reconstituted forms. However limited information exists on enzyme degradation of structurally intact collagen fibers and, more important, on the effect of mechanical deformation on collagen cleavage. We studied the degradation of native rat tail tendon fibers by collagenase after the fibers were mechanically elongated to strains of ε = 1-10%. After the fibers were elongated and the stress allowed to relax, the fiber was immersed in Clostridium histolyticum collagenase and the decrease in stress (σ) monitored as a means of calculating the rate of enzyme cleavage of the fiber. An enzyme mechanokinetic (EMK) relaxation function TE(ε) in sec-1 was calculated from the linear stress-time response during fiber cleavage, where TE(ε) corresponds to the zero-order Michaelis-Menten enzyme-substrate kinetic response. The EMK relaxation function TE(ε) was found to decrease with applied strain at a rate of ~9% per percent strain, with complete inhibition of collagen cleavage predicted to occur at a strain of ~11%. However, comparison of the EMK response (TE vs ε) to collagen’s stress-strain response (σ vs ε) suggested the possibility of three different EMK responses; (1) constant TE(ε) within the toe region (ε<3%), (2) a rapid decrease (~50%) at the transition of the toe-to-heel region (ε≅3%) followed by (3) a constant value throughout the heel (ε=3 to 5%) and linear (ε=5 to 10%) regions. This observation suggests that the mechanism for the strain-dependent inhibition of enzyme cleavage of the collagen triple helix may be by a conformational change in the triple helix since the decrease in TE(ε) appeared concomitant with stretching of the collagen molecule.
Collagen degradation is a mechanism for normal musculoskeletal development and extracellular matrix (ECM) maintenance, and in response to trauma, disease and inflammation. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMP-1, 8, and 13, the collagenases) are the primary enzymes that act to degrade collagen. These MMPs gain access to the collagen triple helix by binding to the enzyme’s attachment domain along the α-chains, followed by separation (unwinding) of the α-chains to expose the 3/4–1/4 cleavage site, and then cleavage of the α-chain by the enzyme’s catalytic domain [3, 5].
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